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Turkish 'walk for justice' continues despite Erdogan threat

President Erdogan has warned Turkey's opposition leader his long march for justice could land him in trouble. Tensions in Turkey have accelerated over the past two months when a referendum gave Erdogan enhanced powers.

Turkey's main opposition leader vowed to press ahead with his "walk for justice" Sunday despite threats from President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

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'Erdogan has a legitimacy problem'

'Erdogan has a legitimacy problem'

On Sunday Kilicdaroglu finished the fourth day of a march that is expected to take nearly a month. His long walk represents by far his biggest challenge to Turkey's increasingly authoritarian regime since he became the leader of the CHP in 2010.

But Erdogan said Saturday that Kilicdaroglu's initiative would bring nothing positive for the country and warned the opposition chief "don't be surprised" if legal proceedings are filed against him.

Both Prime Minister Binali Yildirim and Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag also urged the opposition leader to end his march, with Bozdag accusing Kilicdaroglu of trying to foment opposition to the justice system.

"It is not possible to break the balance of the scales of justice by walking on roads," he said.

Kilicdaroglu with his supporters

But Kilicdaroglu remained steadfast.

"They want to provoke us, but we will not give in! They want to threaten us with the courts and [Erdogan] calls out the judges, the prosecutors," said the CHP leader. "We are walking for justice, not against justice."

March to prison

Kilicdaroglu , 68, has made the word "adalet" or "justice" the slogan of his march, and he has been carrying a placard with the word emblazoned on it.

His 450-kilometer (280-mile) trek is supposed to end at the Maltepe Prison in Istanbul where Berberoglu, the CHP MP, is being held.

Political tensions have risen sharply in Turkey over the past two months - most recently after Erdogan narrowly won a referendum granting him substantially increased authority, which many fear will lead to one-man rule.

But Turkey's slide into political turmoil already began to accelerate last summer after an apparent coup attempt failed. Kilicdaroglu accused Erdogan of being the "July 20 coup plotter" citing the president's subsequent crackdown on his political opponents, both real and perceived.

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Turkey: Democracy or dictatorship?

Turkey: Democracy or dictatorship?

Five days after the failed putsch, Erdogan declared a state of emergency that has seen some 50,000 people arrested and another 100,000 lose their jobs - making it the biggest purge in Turkey's modern history.